Monday, 5 June 1989

I met Megan in spring 1985 and four years later we were
married. It is definitely the best thing I
ever did. We visited Iceland for our
honeymoon and this blog includes a few photos we took during our ten days
there. Most of mine were horribly
over-exposed due to an incorrect film-speed setting on my camera, Megan was
more successful with a small pocket camera.

Iceland was a destination we felt we wouldn’t easily forget
and I was keen to see Harlequin and Barrow’s Goldeneye having not seen the
later and only a female of the former, somewhat distantly on Shetland two years
previously.

On 26 May we flew into Reykjavik where we spent four nights
in a hotel near the airport. We took a
city tour (on which it was announced with some enthusiasm that the outside temperature
was plus one) and visited an open air museum (where it certainly wasn’t that
warm) before joining a ‘Golden Circle tour’ to Gullfoss, Geysir and Thingvellir. Our hotel was close to the coast and not far
from the town enabling us to go on a few interesting walks between tours. Steam coming off geothermally heated streams
provided some amusement especially when there were people sitting in them! The thermally heated open-air pool was very
popular too. Food was very expensive,
perhaps not surprising as most was imported, and we took advantage of lavish
buffet breakfasts, although not quite to the extent of some guests who made
large packed lunches from it.

A few Barrow’s Goldeneye were seen around Reykjavik each
day as well as Whooper Swans, Scaup, Eider and a single Long-tailed Duck. Other more interesting sightings were a flock
of 150 Knot, 18 Red-necked Phalaropes and several Glaucous Gulls and Snow
Buntings. We saw a male Harlequin at
Gullfoss, a very impressive waterfall on our Golden Circle tour. We then visited Geysir which was spouting
regularly to moderate heights, but still was a little disappointing, and a
rather unmemorable Thingvellir and seeing Pink-footed Geese, Merlin, Ptarmigan
and Black-tailed Godwits on the way. We
called in at a Garden Centre on the return to Reykjavik. It was treated as a great novelty and was
perhaps the only one in Iceland? Indoor
plants were their speciality but then nothing exotic would be likely to grow outside!

Hofdi House in Reykjavik, neutral venue for the 1986 Reagan-Gorbachev summit

me at Reykjavik Harbour

Megan at Tjornin Lake in central Reykjavik

Scaup on Tjorin

Reykjavik main street

our hotel

Reykjavik skyline

the biggest trees we saw

Megan at the Open Air Museum

me there too

volcano crater on our Golden Circle Tour

Gullfoss

hot pool at Geysir

Geysir spouting

Geysir

On 30 May we flew to Akureyri for five nights in a
waterfront hotel and hired a car to visit Darvik, Myvatyn and Husavik.Akureyri is at the head of Eyjafjordyr and on
our first evening we walked down to the harbour and along the coast seeing a
pair of Harlequins.They were to be a
regular feature of evening walks.On our
first day with a car we drove 50km or so to Darvik a smaller town on the west
side of the fjord.We saw three
Harlequins on a river near Hrisey, Slavonian Grebe, 22 Red-necked Phalaropes, 2
Iceland and 10 Glaucous Gulls, 4 Black Guillemots, Short-eared Owl and 6 Snow
Buntings.

Akureyri

Ejya Fjord

Akureyri waterfront

en route to Dalvik

Slavonian Grebe

Dalvik

Iceland Gull

Grimsey, Ejya Fjord and our car

Dalvik to Akureyri main road

south of Dalvik

snow-capped mountains all around

Harlequins at Akureyri

The following day we set off early for Lake Myvatyn which I
had been very keen to visit for some time.
A big advantage of visiting in early June is that it was too early for
the midges which plague some visitors although parts of the lake were still
frozen! We briefly stopped at Godafoss on the way but the draw of wildfowl was too great (for me anyway). Driving around the lake we saw 3 Red-throated and 4 Great Northern Divers, 18 Slavonian Grebes, 25 Whooper Swans, 14 species of duck including Harlequins and Barrow's Goldeneye, 25 Ptarmigan, 95 Red-necked Phalaropes, Arctic Skua, Short-eared Owl and 6 Snow Buntings.

Godafoss

Megan at Godafoss

Tufted Duck on a lake near Myvatyn. We saw 250 during the day and 75 Scaup

Long-tailed Ducks on a slowly thawing lake. We saw 16 in total.

wintery scene west of Myvatyn, it was hard to believe it was 1 June.

Harlequin by the Laxa River, 66 of the day's total of 79 were here (11 at Frijodten and we got back to Akureyri in time to see our usual pair)

Barrow's Goldeneye, we saw at least 50

lava field at Myvatyn

Myvatyn

Great Northern Diver

most of the lake was unfrozen

Dimberger lava at Myvatyn

Myvatyn 'slagheap'

hot sulphur pools near Myvatyn

we found these almost as impressive as those at Geysir and having them to ourselves was much nicer!

leaving Myvatyn

We had a day around Akureyri when I thought I had found an immature male King Eider in a colony of Eider at the end of the runway. It was present on subsequent days but checking when I got home revealed a few plumage inconsistencies and I concluded it was a hybrid which I later discovered had been present for a couple of years.